WEXLER v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 21, 2024
Docket2:19-cv-05760
StatusUnknown

This text of WEXLER v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA (WEXLER v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
WEXLER v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, (E.D. Pa. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

TZVIA WEXLER

Plaintiff,

v. CIVIL ACTION NO. 19-5760 CHARMAINE HAWKINS and JAMES KOENIG Defendants. MEMORANDUM OPINION Rufe, J. June 21, 2024 On January 23, 2024, after a five-day trial, a Pennsylvania jury found Defendants Philadelphia Police Officer Charmaine Hawkins and Detective James Koenig liable on counts of false arrest, malicious prosecution, and retaliation, and further found Officer Hawkins liable on counts of assault and battery and excessive force.1 The claims arose from troubling allegations of police misconduct during and after an altercation between Plaintiff Tzvia Wexler and Officer Hawkins at the 2019 Philadelphia Pride Parade. This was not a verdict against all law enforcement officers. In fact, it was anything but. The verdict was specific to two public servants who failed to execute their sworn roles to protect and defend the citizenry. Defendants have filed a motion seeking alternative forms of post-trial relief, including a new trial, entry of judgment as a matter of law, and remittitur of the verdict.2 For the reasons set forth below, Defendants’ motion will be denied, except as to a partial remittitur of the jury’s punitive damages award.

1 Verdict Form at 1–4 [Doc. No. 84]; Civil J. [Doc. No. 87]. 2 Defs.’ Mot. Post-Trial Relief [Doc. No. 102]. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND In setting forth the following factual background, the Court draws all reasonable inferences in favor of Plaintiff, the verdict winner.3 On Sunday, June 9, 2019, Mrs. Wexler and her husband, David Wexler, rode their electric bicycles to synagogue to celebrate the Shavuot holiday.4 The synagogue is located between 4th and 5th Streets and between Market and Arch Streets in the City of Philadelphia.5 After the service, Mrs. Wexler rode her bicycle in the

westerly direction of Rittenhouse Square to meet someone for lunch, while Mr. Wexler left in a different direction for home.6 Unbeknownst to the Wexlers, June 9, 2019, was also the date of the Philadelphia Pride Parade. As Mrs. Wexler approached the corner of 5th and Market Streets, she saw a large crowd participating in the parade, so she dismounted her bicycle and began walking.7 When Mrs. Wexler, walking southbound from Arch to Market Streets, attempted to cross Market Street on foot, a police officer told her that she could not cross at that intersection and gestured toward the 6th Street intersection.8 At trial, Mrs. Wexler introduced video evidence showing officers permitting pedestrians to cross at that intersection.9 Mrs. Wexler began walking

westbound on Market Street toward 6th Street, with the parade on her left side moving in the

3 Blum v. Witco Chem. Corp., 829 F.2d 367, 372 (3d Cir. 1987) (“Because a jury determined the issue, our scope of review is limited to examining whether there is sufficient evidence to support the verdict, drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the verdict winner.”). Among various alternative requests for relief, Defendants seek judgment as a matter of law “on all but Plaintiff’s excessive force and assault and battery claims against Defendant Hawkins . . . .” Defs.’ Mem. Supp. Mot. Post-Trial Relief at 5 [Doc. No. 104]. Accordingly, the sufficiency of the evidence presented at trial is now at issue as to Plaintiff’s false arrest, malicious prosecution, and retaliation claims. 4 T. Wexler Test., Trial Tr. Jan. 17, 2024, at 62. 5 D. Wexler Test., Trial Tr. Jan. 17, 2024, at 26. 6 T. Wexler Test., Trial Tr. Jan. 17, 2024, at 63; D. Wexler Test., Trial Tr. Jan. 17, 2024, at 46–47. 7 T. Wexler Test., Trial Tr. Jan. 17, 2024, at 63, 65–66. 8 Id. at 63–64, 67. 9 Hawkins Test., Trial Tr. Jan. 18, 2024, at 201–06. opposite direction.10 She then heard Officer Hawkins calling out that she should not be walking on the street.11 Mrs. Wexler attempted to explain that she had been directed by another officer to walk toward 6th Street where she could cross Market Street.12 After Officer Hawkins gestured toward the sidewalk and told Mrs. Wexler a second time to get off of the street, Officer Hawkins grabbed the bicycle.13

The jury was tasked with weighing the credibility of Mrs. Wexler and Officer Hawkins’s conflicting testimony about what happened next. Credibility was of central importance at trial because the incident was not captured on Officer Hawkins’s body-worn camera.14 Officer Hawkins’s explanation for the lack of footage was that “sometimes when you hit it, it doesn’t turn on.”15 However, Sergeant Jay Paul Bowen III, an expert on body-worn cameras who reviewed the device’s audit trail, testified that Officer Hawkins had pushed the button on her device only one time, at 12:23 p.m.—several minutes after the time of the incident reflected in police department records—and that the button was not pressed a second time, as required for the camera to begin recording.16 Officer Hawkins admitted to missing most of the training about

body-worn cameras after they were introduced to her district, but agreed that she had successfully recorded footage on a few previous occasions before the incident.17 Plaintiff’s counsel also directed Officer Hawkins to her testimony at the preliminary hearing on the criminal

10 T. Wexler Test., Trial Tr. Jan. 17, 2024, at 120. 11 Id. at 69, 120; 12 T. Wexler Test., Trial Tr. Jan. 17, 2024, at 69, 122. 13 Id. at 69–70, 121–22; Hawkins Test., Trial Tr. Jan. 18, 2024, at 225. 14 Bowen Test., Trial Tr. Jan. 22, 2024, at 266. 15 Hawkins Test., Trial Tr. Jan. 18, 2024, at 186. 16 Bowen Test., Trial Tr. Jan. 22, 2024, at 265, 272–73; Joint Ex. 5 (12:15 p.m. in Arrest Report); Joint Ex. 10 (12:18 p.m. in Medical Checklist). 17 Hawkins Test., Trial Tr. Jan. 18, 2024, at 158, 185–86. charges in July 2019, during which she stated that “[t]he camera was on and it was buffering but [she] didn’t get a chance to push it.”18 Mrs. Wexler provided a consistent account of the relevant events from the stand. She recounted that Officer Hawkins shoved the bicycle into her from behind, moved toward the front of the bicycle, and then shoved Mrs. Wexler with the bicycle again.19 Mrs. Wexler testified that

she asked for Officer Hawkins’s name and badge number because she “felt like it’s not right what she’s doing . . . .”20 Mrs. Wexler testified that immediately thereafter, Officer Hawkins— perhaps, Mrs. Wexler posited, because the request for her badge number was “a trigger”— grabbed Mrs. Wexler’s neck and choked her for what “felt [like] forever,” to the point that Mrs. Wexler thought it was “the end of [her] life.”21 Officer Hawkins gave a different account. According to Officer Hawkins, she was directing the bicycle toward the sidewalk when Mrs. Wexler “jerked the bike” and hit Officer Hawkins on her left side.22 Officer Hawkins expressed her belief that the first hit was unintentional, but when Mrs. Wexler jerked the bicycle a second time, Officer Hawkins told

Mrs. Wexler that she “was going to be sorry” if she hit her with the bicycle again.23 Officer Hawkins testified that Mrs. Wexler then jerked the bicycle “at least three more times after that”—i.e., a total of five times—but when pressed, she later revised her testimony to say that it was merely “several times.”24 When Plaintiff’s counsel directed Officer Hawkins to a

18 Id. at 262. 19 T. Wexler Test., Trial Tr. Jan. 17, 2024, at 69–70, 123–24, 128–29. 20 Id. at 74–75; see also id. at 123, 130–31. 21 Id. at 71, 135; see also id. at 125, 128–29, 132. 22 Hawkins Test., Trial Tr. Jan. 18, 2024, at 225–29. 23 Id. at 228. 24 Id. at 228–29.

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WEXLER v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wexler-v-city-of-philadelphia-paed-2024.